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Bradley
Campbell and Matthias Neumann
Click on any photo below to see a larger
version. All photos were taken by New Yorkled on the first day of
the exhibition.
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Main
WTC Memorial Finalists Page
All were on display at the Winter Garden
at the World Financial Center starting November 19th.
Water and light symbolize life, rejuvenation and rebirth. By using
water and light as key elements of the design and by bringing people
directly to the site of the attacks, we hope that visitors will
remember not only the loss of life but also the sanctity of life
that we live each day. These elements point to the passing of time,
and speak to us of emotion and transcendence. The site is designed
to provide a place in this city and within each of us where we may
find peace in experiencing the challenging, often painful cycle
of death, grief, rebirth and life.
Our physical movement throughout the site, the inclined park and
the various levels of memorial and museum, represents our emotional
movement through the experiences of memory, grief, discovery, hope,
and rebirth. We descend to the memorial spaces, the literal and
figurative centers, and to the Museum of September 11. Our contact
with the names of the victims, their final resting place, the original
slurry wall, and bedrock level of the World Trade Center causes
us to contemplate the profound loss suffered on September 11 and
to be grateful for the many that were saved. As we ascend, we come
back to the city and ourselves transformed by the emotional and
historic magnitude of that day.
Materials have been carefully chosen to support the concept, symbolism
and emotion of the memorial. The memorial space of the North Tower
is clad in black granite - solemn, strong, stable - a reference
to living memory and to the foundation of the towers. The private
area for families of the victims and the intimate area for the public
are made of thick walls of earth, to suggest comfort and stability
at the depths. The façade of the Museum of September 11 in
the South Tower Footprint is stacked glass with sanded edges referring
to both the construction and collapse of the towers.
The design meets the daunting challenge of unifying the various
site characteristics, the breadth of emotional and historical significance,
and the community's many requirements. It is important that the
site fulfill two major roles in the complex program of this memorial.
First, it is a place of peace, reflection and reverence where we
engage ourselves emotionally and spiritually. Second, it addresses
the need for an intellectual understanding and historical perspective
of the events of September 11, 2001. These are the dual roles of,
and the overlap between, the Memorial and the Museum of September
11, 2001.
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